Stephen; yes, eclipse (and the vast majority of open source software) can be used to create commercial software without violating any licensing agreements. where that code goes next is determined by how you license it.

Comment by jeremiah johnson — March 23, 2006

Can this plugin work with RAD which is Eclipse based IDE

Comment by David Smith — September 21, 2006

Hi, I downloaded the JSEclipse and the instructions said to extract the files into the relevant folders (features and plugins). However, I noticed that most of my plugins reside in their own folder, but the interakt zip file did not have the .jar files within folders. Anyway, I followed the instructions but it did not work. Finally I found an editor on Sourceforge called Teniga which did work. The only problem I have found with Teniga is that it does not handle multiple .js files. For example, I use the Sarissa library which defines the Sarissa object, but because the Sarissa.js library is external to the source.js file I am working on, all references to Sarissa are flagged as a warning. What does everyone else use to develop their Javascript applications? It almost reminds me of the old pre-IDE days of C compilers where simple syntax checking utilities are essential.